A Grammar of Modern Indo-European is a complete reference guide to a living Indo-European language.
It contains a comprehensive description of Proto-Indo-European grammar, and offers an analysis of the
complexities of the prehistoric language and its reconstruction from its descendant languages. Written in a
fresh and accessible style, and illustrated with maps, figures and tables, this book focusses on the real
patterns of use of Late Indo-European. The book is well organised and is filled with full, clear explanations
of areas of confusion and difficulty. It also contains an extensive English - Indo-European, Indo-European -
English vocabulary, as well as detailed etymological notes, designed to provide readers with an easy access
to the information they require.

An essential reference source for the student of Indo-European as a learned and living language, this work
will appeal to students of languages, classics, and the ancient world, as well as to general readers
interested in the history of language, and in speaking the direct ancestor of the world's largest language
family.

1.
Buy a Printed Copy for $11.95$ / 9.95£ / 11.49€Please take into account that we prepare printed editions for those of us who like to use this traditional format.
The book sold is not only cheap, but cheaper indeed than any copy made with a home printer,
and it has a better quality. Free licenses allow any editor to publish the book elsewhere without permission,
which guarantees that our share is neglectable. The slightly increased share we receive from online sales at
CreateSpace or
Dnghu's Bookstore
(as 'retailers') is dedicated to
donations of
the printed book.

If you are a member of a public or private institution related to higher education or research,
or a member of the online or printed media,
you can ask for a donation of one or
more printed copies of this book (at contact@dnghu.org),
even as a way to expedite proceedings,
like avoiding internal normative steps - as the formal justification of costs
(and the payment paperwork) for new acquisitions in public libraries.

The decision to accept your request depends on different factors, such as our current stock,
your relationship with the institution (to support its actual interest in acquiring copies),
the destination country
- shippings outside the US or Europe are expensive -,
the potential public awareness your institution offers (in prestige, number of members/readers, etc.),
research or education field/s, and so on.
You can see a map of donations made until now.

We would like our main work to be translated into all possible languages, so that everyone is able to
read it and learn MIE in their mother tongue. If you are interested in translating the text, please
contact us to see if there are other people already working
on it. If you just want to create another translation project, you can directly download and work on the
writable files.

The following files contain automatic translations of version 5.0 properly formatted as WebHelp files
with navigation for easy online reading; also, for simple access without navigation,
you can start directly from the Table of Contents: